Lotus (genus)
Template:Short description Template:About Template:Automatic taxobox
Lotus, a latinization of Greek lōtos (Template:Lang),<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> is a genus of flowering plants that includes most bird's-foot trefoils (also known as bacon-and-eggs)<ref>Collins English Dictionary</ref> and deervetches.<ref>See Acmispon</ref> Depending on the taxonomic authority, roughly between 70 and 150 species are accepted, all legumes; American species formerly placed in the genus have been transferred to other genera. Lotus species are found in the Eastern Hemisphere and adapted to a wide range of habitats.
The aquatic plant commonly known as the Indian or sacred lotus is Nelumbo nucifera, a species not closely related to Lotus.
Description
Template:More citations needed Most species have leaves with five leaflets; two of these are at the extreme base of the leaf, with the other three at the tip of a naked midrib. This gives the appearance of a pair of large stipules below a "petiole" bearing a trefoil of three leaflets; in fact, the true stipules are minute, soon falling or withering.<ref>C. A. Stace, Interactive Flora of the British Isles, a Digital Encyclopaedia: Lotus. Template:ISBN. (Online version Template:Webarchive)</ref> Some species have pinnate leaves with up to 15 leaflets. The flowers are in clusters of three to ten together at the apex of a stem with some basal leafy bracts; they are pea-flower shaped, usually vivid yellow, but occasionally orange or red. The seeds develop in three or four straight, strongly diverging pods, which together make a shape reminiscent of the diverging toes of a small bird, leading to the common name "bird's-foot".
{{#invoke:Gallery|gallery}}
Taxonomy
The genus Lotus is taxonomically complex. It has at times been divided into subgenera and split into segregate genera, but with no consistent consensus. P.H. Raven in 1971 is said to have been the first to suggest that the "New World" (American) and "Old World" (African and Eurasian) species did not belong in the same genus. A molecular phylogenetic study in 2000 based on nuclear ribosomal ITS sequences confirmed this view.<ref name="Allan-2000"/> The Western species have been divided between the genera Hosackia s.str., Ottleya, Acmispon and Syrmatium. A 2006 study, primarily concerned with Eastern Lotus species and hence with limited sampling of the American genera, found that they were all monophyletic. The study also supported the view that Dorycnium and Tetragonolobus are not distinct from Lotus at the generic level.<ref name="Degtjareva-2006"/> More species were added to the 2006 results in 2008, but did not alter the broad conclusions reached before. Clades were identified within Lotus s.str., some of which were significantly different from the sections into which the genus had been divided. However, resolution was incomplete. The results of the analysis were presented in terms of clades and complexes.<ref name="Degtjareva-2008"/>
Species
The following species are recognised in the genus Lotus:<ref name="Plants of the World Online">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Div col
- Lotus aduncus Template:Small
- Lotus aegaeus Template:Small
- Lotus alianus Template:Small
- Lotus alpinus Template:Small - alpine bird's-foot-trefoil
- Lotus anfractuosus Template:Small
- Lotus angustissimus Template:Small – slender bird's-foot trefoil
- Lotus arabicus Template:Small
- Lotus arenarius Template:Small
- Lotus argyrodes Template:Small
- Lotus arinagensis Template:Small
- Lotus assakensis Template:Small
- Lotus australis Template:Small – austral trefoil
- Lotus axilliflorus Template:Small
- Lotus becquetii Template:Small
- Lotus benoistii Template:Small
- Lotus berthelotii Template:Small – Canary Islands trefoil
- Lotus biflorus Template:Small
- Lotus borbasii Template:Small
- Lotus broussonetii Template:Small
- Lotus brunneri Template:Small
- Lotus burttii Template:Small
- Lotus callis-viridis Template:Small
- Lotus campylocladus Template:Small
- Lotus carpetanus Template:Small
- Lotus castellanus Template:Small
- Lotus chazaliei Template:Small
- Lotus compactus Template:Small
- Lotus conimbricensis Template:Small
- Lotus conjugatus Template:Small
- Lotus corniculatus Template:Small – common bird's-foot trefoil, bird's-foot deervetch
- Lotus creticus Template:Small
- Lotus cruentus Template:Small
- Lotus cytisoides Template:Small
- Lotus × davyae Template:Small
- Lotus discolor Template:Small
- Lotus divaricatus Template:Small
- Lotus dorycnium Template:Small
- Lotus drepanocarpus Template:Small
- Lotus dumetorum Template:Small
- Lotus edulis Template:Small
- Lotus emeroides Template:Small
- Lotus eremiticus Template:Small
- Lotus eriophthalmus Template:Small
- Lotus frondosus Template:Small
- Lotus fulgurans Template:Small
- Lotus garcinii Template:Small
- Lotus gebelia Template:Small
- Lotus germanicus Template:Small
- Lotus glacialis Template:Small
- Lotus glareosus Template:Small
- Lotus glaucus Template:Small
- Lotus glinoides Template:Small
- Lotus goetzei Template:Small
- Lotus gomerythus Template:Small
- Lotus graecus Template:Small
- Lotus halophilus Template:Small
- Lotus hebecarpus Template:Small
- Lotus hebranicus Template:Small
- Lotus herbaceus Template:Small
- Lotus hirsutus Template:Small
- Lotus holosericeus Template:Small
- Lotus jacobaeus Template:Small
- Lotus japonicus Template:Small
- Lotus jolyi Template:Small
- Lotus jordanii Template:Small
- Lotus krylovii Template:Small
- Lotus kunkelii Template:Small
- Lotus lalambensis Template:Small
- Lotus lancerottensis Template:Small
- Lotus lanuginosus Template:Small
- Lotus laricus Template:Small
- Lotus latidentatus Template:Small
- Lotus lebrunii Template:Small
- Lotus longisiliquosus Template:Small
- Lotus lourdes-santiagoi Template:Small
- Lotus loweanus Template:Small
- Lotus macranthus Template:Small
- Lotus maculatus Template:Small
- Lotus maritimus Template:Small
- Lotus maroccanus Template:Small
- Lotus mascaensis Template:Small
- Lotus × medioximus Template:Small
- Lotus michauxianus Template:Small
- Lotus × minoricensis Template:Small
- Lotus miyakojimae Template:Small
- Lotus mlanjeanus Template:Small
- Lotus mollis Template:Small
- Lotus namulensis Template:Small
- Lotus nubicus Template:Small
- Lotus oliveirae Template:Small
- Lotus ononopsis Template:Small
- Lotus ornithopodioides Template:Small
- Lotus palustris Template:Small
- Lotus parviflorus Template:Small – smallflower bird's-foot trefoil, smallflower trefoil
- Lotus peczoricus Template:Small
- Lotus pedunculatus Template:Small – greater bird's-foot trefoil, marsh bird's-foot trefoil, large bird's-foot trefoil, big trefoil
- Lotus peregrinus Template:Small
- Lotus polyphyllos Template:Small
- Lotus pseudocreticus Template:Small
- Lotus purpureus Template:Small
- Lotus pyranthus Template:Small
- Lotus quinatus Template:Small
- Lotus rechingeri Template:Small
- Lotus rectus Template:Small
- Lotus requienii Template:Small
- Lotus robsonii Template:Small
- Lotus sanguineus Template:Small
- Lotus schoelleri Template:Small
- Lotus sessilifolius Template:Small
- Lotus simoneae Template:Small
- Lotus spartioides Template:Small
- Lotus spectabilis Template:Small
- Lotus stepposus Template:Small
- Lotus strictus Template:Small
- Lotus subbiflorus Template:Small – hairy bird's-foot trefoil
- Lotus subdigitatus Template:Small
- Lotus taitungensis Template:Small
- Lotus tenellus Template:Small (including Lotus leptophyllus (Lowe) K.Larsen)
- Lotus tenuis Template:Small – narrowleaf trefoil, slender trefoil, creeping trefoil, or prostrate trefoil
- Lotus tetragonolobus Template:Small
- Lotus tetraphyllus Template:Small
- Lotus tibesticus Template:Small
- Lotus torulosus Template:Small
- Lotus × ucrainicus Template:Small
- Lotus villicarpus Template:Small
- Lotus weilleri Template:Small
- Lotus wildii Template:Small
- Lotus zemmouriensis Template:Small
Species placed elsewhere
- Lotus aboriginus = Hosackia rosea
- Lotus argophyllus = Acmispon argophyllus
- Lotus argyraeus = Acmispon argyraeus
- Lotus benthamii = Acmispon cytisoides
- Lotus crassifolius = Hosackia crassifolia
- Lotus dendroideus = Acmispon dendroideus
- Lotus denticulatus = Acmispon denticulatus
- Lotus grandiflorus = Acmispon grandiflorus
- Lotus hamatus = Acmispon micranthus
- Lotus haydonii = Acmispon haydonii
- Lotus heermannii = Acmispon tomentosus var. glabriusculus
- Lotus humistratus = Acmispon brachycarpus
- Lotus incanus = Hosackia incana
- Lotus junceus = Acmispon junceus
- Lotus mearnsii = Acmispon mearnsii
- Lotus micranthus = Acmispon parviflorus
- Lotus nevadensis = Acmispon decumbens
- Lotus nuttallianus = Acmispon prostratus
- Lotus oblongifolius = Hosackia oblongifolia
- Lotus pinnatus = Hosackia pinnata
- Lotus procumbens = Acmispon procumbens
- Lotus rubriflorus = Acmispon rubriflorus
- Lotus salsuginosus = Acmispon maritimus
- Lotus stipularis = Hosackia stipularis
- Lotus wrightii = Ottleya wrightii
Distribution and habitat
The genus contains many dozens of species distributed in the Eastern Hemisphere, including Africa, Europe, western, southern, and eastern Asia, and Australia and New Guinea.<ref name="Plants of the World Online" /> They are adapted to a wide range of habitats, from coastal environments to high elevations.
Ecology
Lotus species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species.
L. corniculatus is an invasive species in some regions of North America and Australia.
Uses
Several species are cultivated for forage, including L. corniculatus, L. glaber, and L. pedunculatus. They can produce toxic cyanogenic glycosides which can be potentially toxic to livestock, but also produce tannins, which are a beneficial anti-bloating compound.
Species in this genus can fix nitrogen from the air courtesy of their root nodules, making them useful as a cover crop. The nodulating symbionts are Bradyrhizobium and Mesorhizobium bacteria. Scientific research for crop improvement and understanding the general biology of the genus is focused on L. japonicus, which is currently the subject of a full genome sequencing project, and is considered a model organism.
Some species, such as L. berthelotii from the Canary Islands, are grown as ornamental plants.